Man dies after confrontation with SEPTA cop

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A SEPTA cop wrestled on the ground with a suspect who later died as panicked dispatchers and cops tried to figure out where he was for eight minutes, audio recordings played for the media showed.

But authoriites are still investigating what, exactly, led to the man’s death after he was transported to a local hospital and why it took 10 minutes for police to drive him to the hospital after he was finally handcuffed.

The incident happened at the Huntington Station on the Market-Frankford Line sometime before 2 a.m. as a transit cop was closing the station.

Video shows the officer escorting the man, apparently peacefully, out of the station to the street level, where he gets into an argument with a third person.

After the officer breaks up that argument, the man — who has yet to be identified by police—turns his anger on the officer.

According to police radio traffic, the officer called for backup at 1:56 a.m. He did not tell other dispatchers where he was. Dispatchers could be heard in the audio saying he could be anywhere between 2nd Street in Center City to Frankford Avenue.

“When you are rolling around on the ground,” said SEPTA Police Chief Thomas Nestel III, “sometimes you forget the most important thing, and that’s where you are.”

Nestel said the officer is a five-year veteran of the SEPTA Police Department. He has no prior complaints for the use of excessive force. He generally works the midnight shift, which Nestel said is typically quiet.

An autopsy is being conducted to determine the man’s cause of death.

Detectives from the Philadelphia Police Homicide Unit are working to determine if the officer committed a crime.